Authors: Steven Levingston
Gabrielle’s defense attorney was the young Henri Robert (pictured here in later years), a renowned, intellectually nimble advocate who had already kept many accused criminals from the guillotine.
Félix Decori, noted for his Mephistophelian mustache, had the difficult task of defending Michel Eyraud.
The courtroom drama turned on the question of whether Gabrielle had committed the murder under Eyraud’s hypnotic influence. The world’s leading expert on hypnosis and crime, Jules Liégeois
(above)
, appeared as an expert witness on behalf of Gabrielle, arguing she could have become the plaything of her hypnotist lover. The prosecution put forward the theories of the prominent neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot
(below)
and his disciple Georges Gilles de la Tourette
(below)
, who contended that murder under hypnosis was impossible.
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